The following has just been published online:

Clapham, P.J., Aguilar, A. and Hatch, L.T.   2007 (in print 2008).  Determining 
spatial and temporal scales for the management of cetaceans: lessons from 
whaling.  Marine Mammal Science doi: 10.1111/j.1748-7692.2007.00175.x.

ABSTRACT  Selection of the appropriate management unit is critical to the 
conservation of animal populations.  Defining such units depends upon knowledge 
of population structure and upon the timescale being considered.  Here, we 
examine the trajectory of eleven subpopulations of five species of baleen 
whales to investigate temporal and spatial scales in management.  These 
subpopulations were all extirpated by commercial whaling, and no recovery or 
repopulation has occurred since.  In these cases, time elapsed since commercial 
extinction ranges from four decades to almost four centuries. We propose that 
these subpopulations did not recover either because cultural memory of the 
habitat has been lost, because widespread whaling among adjacent stocks 
eliminated these as sources for repopulation, and/or because segregation 
following exploitation produced the abandonment of certain areas.  Spatial 
scales associated with the extirpated subpopulations are frequently smaller 
than tho
se typically employed in management.  Overall, the evidence indicates that: i) 
the timeframe for management should be at most decadal in scope (i.e. less than 
100 years) and based on both genetic and non-genetic evidence of population 
substructure, and ii) at least some stocks should be defined on a smaller 
spatial scale than they currently are.

The paper is available free from:

http://www.blackwell-synergy.com/toc/MMS/0/0

Phil Clapham
National Marine Mammal Lab, Seattle


_______________________________________________
MARMAM mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.uvic.ca/mailman/listinfo/marmam

Reply via email to